The Origins Of Procreation
Legends Of Africa
Long ago a man and a woman
came down from heaven, while another man and woman came out of the
ground. The Lord of Heaven also sent a python, the non-poisonous snake,
which made its home in a river. In the beginning men and women had no
children, they had no desire for one another and did not know the
process of procreation and birth.
It was the Python who taught them. He
asked the men and women if they had any children, and on being told that
they had none, the Python said he would make the women conceive. He
told the couples to stand facing each other, then he went into the river
and came out with his mouth full of water. This he sprayed on their
bellies, saying "Kus, kus" (words that are still used in clan rituals).
Then the Python told the couples to go home and lie together, and the
women conceived and bore children.
These children took the spirit of the
river where the Python lived as their clan spirit. Members of that clan
hold the python as taboo; they must never kill it, and if they find a
python that has died or been killed by someone else, they put white clay
on it and bury it human fashion.
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